Alapini vina and eka-tantri vina explained

The ālāpiṇī vīṇā and the eka-tantrī vīṇā were medieval stick-zither and tube-zither veenas in India, with single strings and gourd resonators. The instruments became prominent in Indian music after 500 C.E. as instruments of court music. They replaced the harp-style veenas and lute-style veenas. The instruments were used in Southeast Asia, both mainland and island nations, and were recorded in sculpture and relief sculpture.

Although the tube zithers and stick zithers are very similar, it is possible that they have different origins. Early paintings of stick zithers in India date back at least to the 5th century C.E. The earliest currently known stick zither is in the Caves of Ajanta at the end of the 5th century.[1] After a period of assuming that tube zithers spread from India to Southeast Asia, modern scholars have been trying to decide if the tube zithers might have originated in Southeast Asia and spread to India. Whatever the origins, Indian influence on musical culture in Southeast Asia is recorded in the archaeological remains of past civilizations.[2] [3] [4]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: rudravina.com . The History .
  2. Encyclopedia: Alastair Dick . Gordon Geekie . Richard Widdess . Sadie . Stanley . Vina, section 4 Medieval stick zithers. The New Grove Dictionary of Musical Instruments . 1984 . Volume 3 . 729–730 .
  3. National Security . 4 . 1 . January–March 2021 . Piyal Bhattacharya . Shreetama Chowdhury . How the Ancient Indian Vīṇā Travelled to Other Asian Countries: A Reconstruction through Scriptures, Sculptures, Paintings and Living Traditions . Vivekananda International Foundation . 50–53 .
  4. Louise Wrazen . The Early History of the Vīṇā and Bīn in South and Southeast Asia . Asian Music . Autumn–Winter 1986 . 18 . 1 . 37–42 . University of Texas Press .